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Sumac   /sˈumæk/   Listen
Sumac

noun
(Written also shumac)
1.
Wood of a sumac.
2.
A shrub or tree of the genus Rhus (usually limited to the non-poisonous members of the genus).  Synonyms: shumac, sumach.



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"Sumac" Quotes from Famous Books



... caterpillars. The remainder is weed seeds and fruit, but there were no reports of cultivated fruits being eaten by bluebirds. On the contrary they eat the most undesirable of the wild fruit, chokeberry, pokeberry, Virginia creeper, bitter-sweet and sumac, as well as large quantities of ragweed seeds. Other birds are equally useful but none combines usefulness with so much beauty ...
— Checking the Waste - A Study in Conservation • Mary Huston Gregory

... the shores of the island at the marsh line to find strange evidence of this gift-bearing propensity of the shy tides. Trinkets of all sorts that they gather in travels in distant seas the tides bring and lay lovingly at the roots of black oak and sweet gum, hickory and stag-horn sumac. Here is bamboo that for all I know grew near the head waters of the Orinoco, though it may have sprouted in the Bahamas, floated north by the Gulf Stream, shunted from its warm edge into the chill of the Labrador current and drawn thence by the Cohasset tides. ...
— Old Plymouth Trails • Winthrop Packard

... actively poisonous in their nature, and introduce a possible element of danger to the wearer of the dyed article. For many years, almost the only method of dyeing cotton goods with the aniline colors consisted in a preliminary steeping in sumac or tannic acid, followed by a passage in some suitable compound of tin, and subsequent dyeing in the coloring matter. Sumac and tin have been used for two hundred years or more as the dyer's basis for a considerable number of shades of color from old dye-stuffs; there ...
— Scientific American Supplement, Vol. XIX, No. 470, Jan. 3, 1885 • Various

... kindled near the centre of a little glade, but its flame cast a red glare upon the trees at a distance, until the grey bark of the button-wood, the pale foliage of the acacias, and the scarlet leaves of the sumac, all appeared of one colour: while the darker llianas, stretching from tree to tree, encircled the little glade with ...
— Wood Rangers - The Trappers of Sonora • Mayne Reid

... the wahoo reds And the sumac spreads Tall plumes o'er the purple privet, I beg a kiss Of the wind, tho I wis Right well he never will ...
— Nirvana Days • Cale Young Rice

... as the tall, agile figure of Holcomb appeared above the tangle of sumac, followed by a short, gray-haired man in blue flannel, who was stepping over a refractory sapling ...
— The Lady of Big Shanty • Frank Berkeley Smith

... sumac lit the road with its flaming torch, and here and there on the mountainside a flash of scarlet like a redbird's wing appeared among the masses of foliage. Autumn was at hand, the autumn of the Adirondacks, ...
— The Motor Maids at Sunrise Camp • Katherine Stokes

... pay to buy a little flock for that purpose. Dr. Shandley, of Iowa, says that two to three goats to the acre is sufficient for cleaning up land, and that in two years the goats will eat all of the underbrush from woodland, such as briers, thistles, scrub oak, sumac, and, in fact, any shrub undergrowth. They need no other food than what they can secure from the woods themselves. Consequently, the income from the sale of ...
— Three Acres and Liberty • Bolton Hall

... often to follow the edges of the hardwood swamps, the creek bottoms, the hillsides of popples, and—later in the season—the sumac and berry-vine tangles of the old burnings, looking for that king of ...
— The Adventures of Bobby Orde • Stewart Edward White



Words linked to "Sumac" :   sumac family, sugar-bush, wood, squawbush, genus Rhus, Rhus typhina, lemon sumac, squaw-bush, fragrant sumac, Rhus trilobata, skunkbush, Rhus aromatica, bush, vinegar tree, shrub, Rhus, Rhus ovata, Rhus glabra, Rhus copallina



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